A 44-year-old man presented with painful Horner syndrome: severe periorbital pain, ptosis, and miosis of his right eye, with intact facial sweating. Lymphadenitis at the right side of his neck preceded the symptoms. MRI and magnetic resonance angiography showed thickening of the right internal carotid artery, extending from the bifurcation to the cavernous sinus, without evidence for dissection. The patient was treated with corticosteroids with immediate improvement. Control MRI scanning was normal after 6 weeks. We conclude that the painful Horner syndrome was caused by a reactive arteritis of the right internal carotid artery
Traumatic dissection of the carotid artery may result in neck pain, an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome...
Horner syndrome is characterized by miosis, ptosis, facial anhydrosis and enophtalmus and is caused ...
Horner syndrome may occur as the result of a lesion anywhere along the sympathetic pathway supplying...
A 44-year-old man presented with painful Horner syndrome: severe periorbital pain, ptosis, and miosi...
Acquired Horner syndrome comprises a constellation of clinical signs, including ipsilateral eyelid p...
AbstractOculosympathetic paresis, historically known as Horner sydrome, classically results in a tri...
A Horner's syndrome not associated with other cranial nerve palsies is generally felt not to represe...
Paresthesias; Headache; DizzinessA 57-year old male with paresthesias, frontal orbital headache and ...
Horner syndrome refers to a set of clinical presentations resulting from disruption of sympathetic i...
Background: Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a systemic inflammatory vasculitis that affects medium- an...
Carotid artery dissection can occur either spontaneously or because of trauma. It is usually the mos...
Introduction: A persistent primitive trigeminal artery (PTA) is the most common type of fetal caroti...
SUMMARY: We report a rare case of hypoplasia of the right internal carotid artery (ICA) with ipsilat...
BackgroundzzHorner syndrome (HS), also known as Claude-Bernard-Horner syndrome or oculosympathetic p...
Traumatic dissection of the carotid artery may result in neck pain, an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome...
Traumatic dissection of the carotid artery may result in neck pain, an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome...
Horner syndrome is characterized by miosis, ptosis, facial anhydrosis and enophtalmus and is caused ...
Horner syndrome may occur as the result of a lesion anywhere along the sympathetic pathway supplying...
A 44-year-old man presented with painful Horner syndrome: severe periorbital pain, ptosis, and miosi...
Acquired Horner syndrome comprises a constellation of clinical signs, including ipsilateral eyelid p...
AbstractOculosympathetic paresis, historically known as Horner sydrome, classically results in a tri...
A Horner's syndrome not associated with other cranial nerve palsies is generally felt not to represe...
Paresthesias; Headache; DizzinessA 57-year old male with paresthesias, frontal orbital headache and ...
Horner syndrome refers to a set of clinical presentations resulting from disruption of sympathetic i...
Background: Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a systemic inflammatory vasculitis that affects medium- an...
Carotid artery dissection can occur either spontaneously or because of trauma. It is usually the mos...
Introduction: A persistent primitive trigeminal artery (PTA) is the most common type of fetal caroti...
SUMMARY: We report a rare case of hypoplasia of the right internal carotid artery (ICA) with ipsilat...
BackgroundzzHorner syndrome (HS), also known as Claude-Bernard-Horner syndrome or oculosympathetic p...
Traumatic dissection of the carotid artery may result in neck pain, an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome...
Traumatic dissection of the carotid artery may result in neck pain, an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome...
Horner syndrome is characterized by miosis, ptosis, facial anhydrosis and enophtalmus and is caused ...
Horner syndrome may occur as the result of a lesion anywhere along the sympathetic pathway supplying...